19 out of 20. I never saw that first toy growing up. One of the questions was a little futuristic for the baby boomers. Our remote was never attached to the tv, there were no remotes when we were kids. Just knobs.

He talked about them often. They had rhyming signs posted by the side of the rode. The first sign would be one stanza, then the next would be another stanza. The advertisement was a series of signs that you read as you drove along back when cars traveled more slowly.

In our travels when I was a child we would see similar ones for other products once in a great while.

My church would put them out for events at our church as we had a long entry drive. I could not believe it when I saw them the first time. It was like my Dad was blessing our choice for a church after I remarried.

I guessed on the gun name based on what was catchy and simple, I guessed on the attached remote (never had a remote until everyone did), and I missed the food one. I thought about hitting all, but I thought, "We didn't have tv dinners all the time. They were a rare treat!" Funny how the absolutely everyday things become the forgotten and barely remembered things.

someone just posted a youtube of a young boy trying to make a call from a phone with a rotary dial with no success.
When I was teaching I had a wall phone in my room, not a rotary dial, but the old fashioned one. I taught my little ones to answer the phone. It was a job on our job chart. One day a little boy went to answer the phone and picked up the receiver and stared at it. Then he put it to his ear, heard the person on the other end. Took the receiver away from his ear, held it in front of his face and tried to talk into the same place he listened from. Me being the teacher I am was laughing so hard I couldn't help him for at least a minute. Blame it on cell phones.

I can visualize him with the phone and you laughing in the background.

We had a harvest gold rotary phone attached to the wall in the kitchen. My grandparents had a older style black phone which sat on a shelf in a hallway near the dining room. The shelf was actually part of a built in cove in the wall. It had a more narrow storage space as well below where the phone was found. It was for the phonebook.

I remember my grandparents phone number for some reason. It started with letters. It was LA 1- 0667. LA did not stand for Los Angeles. They lived in Dallas, Texas and I have no idea what the LA stood for. Maybe it was a neighborhood abbreviation.

I also remember that there were pieces of furniture made for the desk style phones. There was a raised desk area to hold the phone. It was small. Then there was a chair connected where you could sit down to make or receive your call. I have not seen one of those in an antique store in a long time.

I got 18 out of 20. I was born in the 1990s. Why do they make these quizzes ridiculously easy? There were only two that I thought were actually definitively from the Boomers: the toy and the obscure commercial.